- Associated Press - Tuesday, January 14, 2020

The president of Washington State University tweeted Tuesday that Hawaii’s Nick Rolovich will take over as the Cougars’ head football coach, replacing Mike Leach.

School President Kirk Schulz tweeted that WSU had picked “a dynamic new head coach @Nick Rolovich’’ to succeed Leach, who left for Mississippi State.

The school scheduled a Thursday event to introduce Rolovich in Pullman, Washington.

Rolovich, meanwhile, has changed his Twitter profile to identify himself as the head football coach at Washington State.

Hawaii Athletic Director David Matlin tweeted Monday night that Rolovich had informed him he had accepted the job at Washington State.

The Athletic first reported that Rolovich was expected to take over the Washington State program. The deal is expected to be for five years at $3 million per season, two people with knowledge of the situation told The Associated Press on Monday. The people spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the hiring had not been announced by the school.

Rolovich has been at Hawaii for four seasons and led the Rainbow Warriors to the Mountain West Conference West Division title this season. Hawaii went 10-5 overall, losing to Boise State in the MWC title game but rebounding to beat BYU in the Hawaii Bowl.

Rolovich has overseen a significant turnaround with the Warriors. When he took over at Hawaii in 2016, he inherited a program that had won 11 total games in its first four seasons in the Mountain West. He’s won at least seven games in three of his four seasons. The 10 wins this season were the most for the Warriors since 2010, when they won 10 games and were co-champs of the WAC with Nevada and Boise State.

The 40-year-old Rolovich is 28-27 in four seasons with the Warriors, including three bowl appearances. He signed a two-year contract extension with Hawaii last January and made more than $600,000 last season with the Warriors.

Rolovich spent four seasons as an assistant at Hawaii before becoming the offensive coordinator at Nevada in 2012. He returned to his alma mater to take over the head job with the Warriors in 2016.

Rolovich makes sense for Washington State because of the style of offense he’s run during his time at Hawaii. His high-scoring, pass-happy system will play well in Pullman after Leach’s time installing the “Air Raid” offense on the Palouse.

Hawaii ranked fifth in the country in passing this season and was ninth last season when Rolovich fully adopted a pass-heavy offense for the Warriors.

Washington State athletic director Pat Chun didn’t give much detail last week about what he was seeking in a head coach and whether he wanted to stay with the specific style Leach coached, which made Washington State an attractive destination for quarterbacks and skill position players. Chun didn’t give a timeline, only reiterating he understood the urgency of landing a head coach while not wanting to rush the process.

Chun said he believed it was not the same job it was when Leach was hired in late 2011. Washington State was 9-40 before Leach arrived. The Cougars went 55-47 with six bowl appearances in Leach’s eight seasons.

“I believe that Coach Leach has left us in great shape,” Chun said. “Based on what he took over and what is here now, this is not a rebuild anymore at Washington State. We need and will go find the right person that is going to add to this program.”

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AP College Football Writer Ralph D. Russo contributed to this report.

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More AP college football: https://apnews.com/Collegefootball and https://twitter.com/AP_Top25

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